In this file photo, cattle roam through the campground area of Lawson's Landing...they keep the weeds down and feed on the wild grasses that grow between the large sand mountains.
The Tomales Dunes are a 1,000 acre chunk of wildland at the head of Tomales Bay, owned by Mike Lawson and his family. Lawson operates a campground/trailer park on some of the property.

Photo: Brant Ward, SFC

In this file photo, cattle roam through the campground area of...

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Lawson's Landing. Chronicle Graphic

Lawson's Landing. Chronicle Graphic

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In this file photo, Mike Lawson stands on Lawson Landings "Nob Hill." This is a block long home of classic trailers...many of which have been at this location for years. Lawson says the trailers are the only way he can make a living and says he will not expand.
The Tomales Dunes are a 1,000 acre chunk of wildland at the head of Tomales Bay, owned by Mike Lawson and his family.

Photo: Brant Ward

In this file photo, Mike Lawson stands on Lawson Landings "Nob...

Image 4 of 4

In this file photo, some places at Lawson's Landing look like a desert instead of the California coast.

A man shot and killed at a fishing and camping resort at the mouth of Tomales Bay in Marin County was identified Monday as 19-year-old Stachaun Jackson.

Jackson was reported shot at 2:30 a.m. Thursday in a trailer at Lawson's Landing at Dillon Beach, where he had been living intermittently, according to the Marin County sheriff's office.

Ken Neville, 56, of Dillon Beach was arrested Thursday afternoon in Jackson's killing. A 53-year-old man who had been detained for questioning was later released, said sheriff's Lt. Jamie Scardina. A gun was recovered, he said.

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The victim had lived at the trailer off and on and knew the two other men, but the circumstances leading up to the shooting remain under investigation, Scardina said.

Deputies had responded to the same trailer in July, at which time someone there had been taken in for a psychiatric evaluation, Scardina said. Last month, he said, one of the older men had called deputies, asking that Jackson "not come around anymore."

The resort has been the scene of violence in the past. In 2007, three men were arrested there in the beating death of a Santa Rosa man during a camping trip.